The
Iraq War: A Case Study
by
Douglas E. Spicer
What
We’re Working With
As
a byproduct of our modern culture, our attention spans are shrinking.
The American mind is so besieged by information and so saturated
by marketing schema that clear thinking on complex issues is almost
impossible. For many, it is not even possible. Never mind that it’s
not fashionable to be mindful since "fun" is the most
important pursuit of the world citizen; certainly, fun and mindfulness
do not work well together. So the thinking goes: when one tires
of the constant motion of fun (a fast lifestyle filled with shopping,
fast food, amusement parks, video games, and dance clubs) then one
should forget their cares by doing absolutely nothing. This opposite
of fun is called recuperation. Therefore, for many in our society,
there is a shrinking middle ground between high-pitched excitement
and the intentional void of thoughtlessness to counter it except
that dismal period of in-between called life. This usually consists
of the day-to-day routine of work and/or school, which is also spared
of any semblance of thought, for that is the very essence of routine.
It is no wonder that many Americans, merely dwelling in a routine
between the highs and lows of thrills and recovery, are incapable
of simple thought, much less enlightened conversation (of which
mindful thought is a prerequisite). So what to make of all this
and how did it come to be? Is thought the first casualty of capitalism
run amuck?
There
has been much talk lately of the failures of the American educational
system, which is readily apparent. However, before we simply write
off society’s problems as evidence of a failed education system
(which many do), we need to establish the direction of causation.
We may have it all in reverse – could a nation of entertainment-driven
know-nothings prosper in a legitimate educational system? Has our
educational system been "dumbed down" in an attempt to
meet the citizenry on their terms? There is support for this notion:
college admission standards admittedly have been lowered for greater
inclusion, the format of the SAT has been changed to allow for "less
competitive" students to achieve parity and there is considerable
pressure on universities to graduate more students regardless of
academic performance (especially if those students have protected
status, i.e. minorities). So we cannot fully blame the educational
system for society’s failings (although many do and rightfully so)
because it is not entirely accurate. At the very least, there are
other forces at work.
The
rise of the marketing industry has produced an American landscape
characterized by advertising litter and propaganda. Our conscious
and subconscious minds absorb constant and ubiquitous advertising
to the point of rendering our minds numb. The sea of information
is too vast and too steady to allow for sufficient processing so
we take shortcuts and we tend to only consume information that is
easily digestible. For instance, we vote for the candidate that
belongs to the political party we like the most; we buy products
based on brand and name recognition instead of measures of quality;
we prefer our news in digested form and the issues explained in
sound bytes; and we only consume that knowledge which will make
our lives easier or better. We are consummate utilitarians in the
marketplace of information! We get just the essentials and then
we are in a hurry to get to the checkout. In essence, we are hurried
consumers at all levels in our society, not just in the supermarket
aisle. But so what? We all know this right? And if you’ve made it
this far, you probably congratulate yourself for being above all
of this.
History
as Fast Food
My
main point is to take a look at history, even "current history"
if such an oxymoron is permissible, from the proto-nihilist point
of view that I’ve offered. Foremost, what will the history books
say about the American-Iraqi war of 2003, especially the American
history books 50 years from now? They will surely talk about George
Bush, our leader, rushing in troops on fears that there were weapons
of mass destruction (WMD). If they do mention that there weren’t
any to be found (but they did find a few gas masks!) I’m sure the
dialogue will then focus on vague concepts like "bringing democracy
to the Iraqi people" or "liberation" if the term
democracy is out of use by then. There will be little to no mention
of oil and there certainly will not be much coverage of the massive
protestations here at home and abroad. There will be no talk of
American might fighting for the interests of Israel due to powerful
"Likudniks" inside our DC Beltway. Nor will there be talk
of Dick Cheney’s scandalous Halliburton involvement (Teapot Dome?)
and the lucrative post-war contracts doled out to partisans of the
neo-con administration. In essence, the official history of this
great unpleasantness that we are all now fully aware of will become
sanitized for later generations as another example of American might,
American benevolence and the proud tradition of "the American
way."
You
can be sure of this because it is already happening. Even if you
agree with the sanitized, popular assessment of the war, and many
of you do, is it reasonable to leave out all of the relevant details?
Moreover, is it honest to omit the details and simply offer a clean,
simplistic, sugary summary? The current treatment of the American-Iraq
War fits neatly into a simple narrative:
The
world’s leading democracy liberated the Iraqi people from a
corrupt regime, spreading the holy religion of American-brand
democracy and capitalism to yet another sector of world citizens.
Military force was necessary and precisely directed to minimize
civilian casualties. It was another American success story.
What
is there not to like? For many of you, this sounds like an overly
simplified view of a very complex series of events, suitable only
for grade school children who aren’t yet sophisticated enough to
deal with the full scale of the events, and rightfully so. It conspicuously
leaves out the following: the crumbling American economy, the millions
of citizens who protested against the war versus the thousands who
protested for it (isn’t a "democracy" supposed to represent
the will of the majority in a polity?), Bush’s National Security
Strategy which advances American foreign policy toward pre-emptive
war, the role of Iraq’s oil reserves for which control means control
over the world’s most prized natural resource, the role of 9/11
as an emotional trigger for enlisting popular support and how no
one has yet to demonstrate a link between Osama bin Laden and Saddam
Hussein, and last, the unusual migration of the impetus for this
war from retaliation for 9/11, to Hussein’s lack of cooperation
with the UN, to an American invasion to search for weapons of mass
destruction, to a "war on terrorism" to a war to liberate
the Iraqi people. That’s five completely different rationales
for why we must invade Iraq immediately! Few noticed that
problems so critical to our country, at least rhetorically by our
President, were routinely swept aside and rarely mentioned thereafter
once opinion polls showed that Americans didn’t agree with the administration.
Would a citizenry with an attention span of more than 5 minutes
allow for this? No way. But this is precisely what has happened
and already we are witnessing the dissolution of these facts surrounding
this very recent war.
A
Definite Future and a False Past
For
many Americans (dare I say "most"), this analysis is an
interesting discussion of how events that happen now will
forever be laid threadbare by pro-American, sensationalist, simplistic
historians. It is a disservice to future generations who will have
to dig through newspaper articles, House and Senate speeches and
magazine articles to learn what we all take for granted as common
knowledge. Those few that uncover the real nature of this latest
war will be accused of treason for daring to speak ill of our great
nation, our current crop of great leaders, and the noble American
spirit that goes forth to establish democracy (and oil wells) on
foreign shores. One day, there may even be a monument erected to
George W. Bush in Washington, DC to honor our current leader, despite
a great deal of ill will towards him presently. It would not be
ridiculous for there to be a Bush Memorial erected to honor the
leader who saw America through it’s great period of ascendancy in
establishing a Pax Americana. This spirit is already alive and well
and will only intensify over time.
Déjà
vu
Now
for the jolt: this scenario has already been fully played out. Just
as there were widespread complaints that "he is not our president"
rang out when GWB took office, the country literally split in two
when Lincoln took office – interestingly, he didn’t garner one electoral
vote from the South. Just as thousands of citizens marched in protest
against Lincoln’s unlawful invasion of the South (most strongly
in New York City) so too thousands of citizens took to the streets
to protest Bush’s unsupported war (WMD?), again with the largest
turnout in NYC (some estimates point to upwards of 250,000 in a
single event). Newspaper editorials all over the North clamored
that Lincoln’s war was unjust; it was unsupported by the people;
there was widespread common knowledge that Lincoln’s cronies were
to get rich from the war effort (Halliburton?) which they did; the
economy was on very shaky ground and the ill-advised war was deemed
unaffordable; he ordered Federal troops to Fort Sumter, SC in 1861
without Congressional approval (pre-emptive force augmentation)
to send a clear message using military force; Lincoln turned the
country into a police state to ferret out any Southern sympathizers;
he suspended civil liberties to accomplish strict police state objectives,
despite being ruled unconstitutional by the Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court; last, it was also common knowledge at home and abroad
(particularly amongst the British) that Lincoln was waging war against
those who opposed his domestic and foreign policy objectives by
use of force. Does any of this sound unbelievably familiar to us
current Americans? You bet it does.
Just
as the Bush Myth is well underway, with terms such as "freedom"
and "liberation" being inaccurately thrown about, the
Lincoln Myth relied on the terms "Union" and "the
people" whenever it was possible. The tactic of using ironclad
principles of war and terror to produce empire, while using vague
rhetoric to justify these policies is a political trick used identically
both by Lincoln and Bush. Whereas Lincoln has been called The Great
Emancipator, Bush is being cheered as The Great Liberator… of the
Iraqi people. The principle difference between these two, perhaps
the only difference, is that history is yet to embrace George Bush
to the extent that historians have literally deified Lincoln.
He is the patron saint of Union and, oddly, democracy to the "America
– Right or Wrong!" crowd.
The
good news is that the Lincoln Myth is finally losing its credibility.
Only recently, serious scholars have began to question the mountains
of evidence that paint a much different picture of the real Lincoln
from the Lincoln of myth and folklore. Foremost, Professor Thomas
J. DiLorenzo has written a point-by-point analysis of the Lincoln
administration called simply "The Real Lincoln." This
book alone, a compendium of factual details pulled from all available
news sources, should suffice to render the Lincoln Myth fully exposed
as a fraud. Moreover, a simple Google search with the words "Lincoln
myth" reveals 113,000 results, including a Lincoln-Myth group
at Yahoo! I can save you some work by referring you to my two favorite
sites, www.lincolnmyth.com
and LewRockwell.com's
Lincoln Archives, although I admit that I’m yet to peruse them
all.
The
Lincoln Myth has persisted not because it is true, quite the contrary,
but because it has been adopted by the American educational system
and spoon-fed to students for generations. The official, sanitized
version of history that is taught in our schools does not stand
up to any rigorous debate, which until now has not been the case.
It has taken 140 years for the Lincoln Myth to be exposed as a fraud,
intentionally fabricated and "dumbed down" to the intellectual
level of a nursery rhyme. Must we wait another 140 years for all
the facts to appear in any serious discussion of the Iraq War? Rather
than saddle future generations with the burden of discovering the
truth beneath the layers of sanitized hogwash, we should make sure
to keep all the relevant facts of the Bush administration and their
so vehemently desired war fully in view. Whether you support this
latest war or not, as Americans we should all be proud and honest
enough to give an accurate, detailed picture of history as we are
making it. If there is any birthright we should give future generations
of Americans, it is that of an accurate and honest account of the
American experience. Anything less is mere propaganda on a par with
Germany from the 1930s and 1940s.
Conclusion
The
elevation of Lincoln as the original American martyr is a direct
affront to all of our legitimate heroes from our founding, during
our secession from the British Crown, to the soldiers fighting on
this very night over in Iraq. America was founded as the opponent
to empire, a policy which Lincoln then turned on its head less than
100 years later. Now 140 years after Lincoln, Bush is promoting
a world police force using the American military with the right
of pre-emptive aggression. Can we afford this and do we want
the role of world policeman? The serious debate that desperately
needs to occur on these complex issues is impossible amongst the
masses who are sated by television, video games, entertainment and
the junk history being leveled at them in our schools and on our
news channels. Propaganda and history are bitter enemies. If you’re
confused between the two, consider this: history does not choose
sides.
The
Lincoln Myth needs to be exposed because it is a fraud. Moreover,
it needs to be exposed so that a proper comparison can be made between
the Lincoln administration and the current Bush administration,
which is an accurate comparison. The critical thinking skills necessary
for a real democracy, for an enlightened polity, are not being developed
by the one institution we safeguard for this duty: our schools.
Last, our current history is being written not for an enlightened
audience, capable of dealing with all of the complexities of our
day, but for primitive minds guided by emotional rhetoric and oblivious
toward facts.
Many
Americans are ardent Bush supporters who feel that the Iraq War
has been fully justified. For them, the use of our military force
to overthrow Saddam and liberate the Iraqi people is a duty, following
in the Wilsonian tradition of spreading American democracy to every
clime and place that yearns for it. To their credit, many are well
aware of the social, political, and economic forces which have played
out on the American landscape. They have cheered Bush all along
and they happily enjoy the results of the war. There is no greater
duty in the telling of this newest chapter in America’s war annals
than that of comprehensive regard for the truth including all of
the factors that have been crucial to this war. Irrespective of
one’s feelings toward the Iraq War, one cannot truly love America
with a heart full of pride towards her achievements if they allow
our history to be sanitized and watered down for future generations
(or this present generation).
For
those of us who are well aware of the truly complex issues facing
our nation, it is our duty to resist the fairytale tellers’ version
of history and deliver a message that is at once consistent with
reality, supported by facts, and unadorned with fiction. It’s no
small task but neither is myth making and we have Truth on our side.
April
17, 2003
Douglas
E. Spicer [send him
mail] is the Chairman of The Southern Caucus, which publishes
Ron Holland’s Dixie
Daily News.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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